William Shatner Won't Be Able To Attend Leonard Nimoy's Funeral



via BuzzFeed

“I feel really awful,” said the actor, who has charity work commitments.



Leonard Nimoy and William Shatner, pictured on Aug. 19, 2006.


Ethan Miller / Getty Images


"I loved him like a brother. We will all miss his humor, his talent, and his capacity to love," Shatner said on Twitter.


Nimoy, famous for playing the Vulcan Mr. Spock, died Friday from end-stage chronic obstructive pulmonary disease at the age of 83.


"I am so humbled by the worldwide outpouring of love that has been displayed; words cannot express my feelings," Shatner wrote.




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Leonard Nimoy's Spock Was The Nerd Hero Who Taught Us How To Feel



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Leonard Nimoy as Spock on Star Trek


Paramount Pictures


Star Trek is for nerds. That much has been certain ever since Gene Roddenberry’s optimistic sci-fi vision for the future first debuted on NBC in 1966. From its preoccupation with invented technologies like warp nacelles and transporter pads to the vagaries of made-up alien cultures like the Klingons and the Romulans, you had to be on the show’s particular wavelength to really grasp its lasting hold on the culture. The show, and its subsequent movies and spin-off series, spoke to a unique blend of passions cultivated by often socially awkward men and women whose abiding faith in and arcane knowledge of science and technology was matched by an earnest hope that the world we live in now will, someday, get much better. In other words: nerds.


We wanted to believe we could be Kirk, but we definitely knew we could be Spock.


And Spock — as played by Leonard Nimoy, who died Friday at 83 — was our ultimate nerd hero. The half-Vulcan's brilliant mind was guided by a razor-sharp perception of the laws of logic that was not just enviable to nerds, it was aspirational. He could cut through the emotions that seemed to clutter up cogent thought, finding the objective reason tucked inside most any problem or scenario. Spock’s counterpart, William Shatner’s Capt. James T. Kirk, was a different kind of aspirational figure: the virile, impassioned leader who was sexual catnip to anyone he wanted to seduce. In order words, he wasn’t a nerd. We wanted to believe we could be Kirk, but we definitely knew we could be Spock.


Though his dispassion at times deliberately read as cold, Nimoy was too adept an actor to make the character an icy, uncaring robot, no matter how often Dr. Leonard McCoy (DeForest Kelley) accused him of being one. Because, in a masterstroke by Roddenberry, Spock was more than just half-human — his veneer of Vulcan logic also masked a well of explosive emotions the Vulcan people had spent centuries striving to overcome.


In the Season 2 premiere of the original Star Trek TV series, "Amok Time,” fans were introduced to pon farr, a Vulcan mating phenomenon in which men are engulfed with a kind of sexual madness that has to be satiated or it will kill them. If there is a better metaphor for adolescent puberty, I have not encountered it. I’m not sure if Roddenberry deliberately set out to forge a kinship between Spock and young teenage nerds who were overwhelmed — even terrified — by their own roiling emotions and sexuality, but he did.



Paramount Pictures


It was alarming for his crewmates and for the audience to see Spock in such a deranged state in "Amok Time." But it also gave the character — and Nimoy — vital emotional shading, a sense that Spock was far more than just a paragon of logic and intellect. And not just due to his literally dangerous sexuality, either. In the episode's climactic moment, Spock seemingly kills Kirk in a ritualistic Vulcan battle meant to quell Spock’s pon farr. Back on the Enterprise, Spock announces he will resign from Starfleet in disgrace, only to discover Kirk is still alive — knocked out instead by Dr. McCoy in a ploy to simulate death. Spock is so elated to see his friend still alive that he briefly exclaims “Jim!” and grabs Kirk by the shoulders with a huge smile. It was a great winking moment for Spock, Nimoy, and the audience, letting us know that even nerds are allowed to feel — even if it makes us uncomfortable.


As Trek expanded its reach, and Spock took hold as not just a character but a kind of cultural icon, Nimoy became — for better or worse — synonymous with the role. And like twentysomethings trying to escape their own teenage nerdom, Nimoy tried to shake off his connection to Trek in the 1970s with his autobiography I Am Not Spock. But the gravitational pull of Trek’s growing popularity proved inescapable. And eventually, the actor moved beyond accepting his reality to learning not to take himself or the role so seriously. In 1986’s Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home — directed by Nimoy — we were treated to the sight of Spock loose in 20th century San Francisco. He tussled with antisocial punks, learned how to use profanity (or, in Spock’s parlance, “colorful metaphors”), and he swam in his skivvies while mind-melding with a humpback whale.


Some Trek fans — Trekkies, Trekkers, whichever word you prefer — found this irreverence disconcerting. But actually, it was a gift. Passionate fandom can ossify into an unforgiving cultural rigidity, especially when that fandom is overseen by a core group of nerds who archive and catalog every last detail about the thing they love. But in order to thrive, those cultural entities also need to continue to grow with us and with the times in which we live. And that's something Nimoy understood. In Star Trek IV, he gave us a looser, less self-important Spock and Trek, something to remind nerds that logic and intellect needn’t preclude a self-awareness and sense of humor.



Patrick Stewart and Nimoy in the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "Unification, Part 2"


Paramount / Courtesy Everett Collection


In the '90s and '00s, as Shatner embraced his position as a kind of pop-cultural kitsch icon with Priceline ads and his Emmy-winning run on Boston Legal, Nimoy settled comfortably into the role as Trek’s wise elder. His appearance as Spock on Star Trek: The Next Generation in a two-part episode in 1991 was a true television event, earning a reported 25 million viewers, making it one of the most-watched Star Trek TV episodes ever. It was a dream for both old and new Trek fans to see Spock discuss the nature of fallible human emotions with Data (Brent Spiner) — TNG’s own brilliant character at odds with how to express his (perhaps nonexistent) humanity — bringing two nerd cultural paragons together on the same screen.


By the time the actor played Spock in J.J. Abrams’ cinematic Star Trek reboot, Nimoy had come to embody Trek itself, lending the more Star Wars-ian proceedings an air of cultural legitimacy. It’s almost eerie, then, that Nimoy’s death falls at a kind of turning point for the entire Trek franchise: Abrams is setting aside Trek to revive the Star Wars franchise in earnest, and fans regard the last Trek movie, Star Trek Into Darkness, with no small amount of disdain.



Paramount Pictures / Via youtube.com


But despair is not logical. Spock has helped expand the very idea of what it means to be a nerd, making his struggle between emotion and logic feel universal, part of the greater human endeavor to strive for something better. And in doing so, he helped to greatly improve nerdom’s cultural currency. The biggest comedy on network TV today, The Big Bang Theory, is literally about nerds who worshipped Spock as kids — and still do as adults. And President Barack Obama said in a statement on Friday marking Nimoy’s passing, “Long before being nerdy was cool, there was Leonard Nimoy.” The president even flatly stated, “I loved Spock.”


When I think about Spock and Nimoy leaving us, like so many Trek fans today, I inevitably think back to 1982’s Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, still the best Trek movie ever and the fullest expression of what Spock meant to me, and to nerds everywhere. Faced with certain death, Spock exposed himself to a lethal dose of radiation in order to save the Enterprise, and sacrificed his body in the process. (That sacrifice would be undone in the follow-up film The Search for Spock, but this is science fiction, after all.)


As Kirk looked upon the ruined body of his closest friend, Spock used his final breaths to share his kinship with Kirk — and, really, with the entire audience — saying, “I have been, and always shall be, your friend.” Just typing those words floods me with emotion. Spock was one of our heroes, and by the end, he also became one of our friends. He will stay with us. As Kirk expressed so eloquently at Spock’s funeral:



Paramount Pictures / Via youtube.com



Claire Underwood Made A To-Die-For Decision In "House Of Cards" Season 3



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Warning: style-related spoilers ahead!


Throughout House of Cards' first two and a half seasons, the only thing more consistent than Claire Underwood's (Robin Wright) take-no-prisoners attitude was her hair color.


Throughout House of Cards' first two and a half seasons, the only thing more consistent than Claire Underwood's (Robin Wright) take-no-prisoners attitude was her hair color.


Netflix



Netflix



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An Astronaut Gave An Out-Of-This-World Tribute To Leonard Nimoy



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Live long and prosper.


Star Trek fans are still in mourning for Leonard Nimoy, the actor famous for his role as Spock, who died on Friday at the age of 83.


Star Trek fans are still in mourning for Leonard Nimoy, the actor famous for his role as Spock, who died on Friday at the age of 83.


ROBYN BECK/AFP / Getty Images


The beloved sci-fi character was known by the Vulcan "live long and prosper" hand gesture.


The beloved sci-fi character was known by the Vulcan "live long and prosper" hand gesture.


Paramount/Courtesy Everett Collection




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Celebrities, Scientists, And More Remember Leonard Nimoy



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“I loved him like a brother,” William Shatner said.


Star Trek legend Leonard Nimoy died on Friday at 83. And there was an outpouring of love for the late actor all over social media, from those who worked with him, knew him, and were inspired by him.


Star Trek legend Leonard Nimoy died on Friday at 83. And there was an outpouring of love for the late actor all over social media, from those who worked with him, knew him, and were inspired by him.


CBS Television Distrubtion/Courtesy Everett Collection


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Kelly Osbourne Quits "Fashion Police" In The Wake Of Rancic-Zendaya Controversy



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The news comes days after the show was at the center of a media firestorm when co-host Giuliana Rancic made racist comments about Zendaya’s hair.



NBC Universal


Kelly Osbourne has left E!'s Fashion Police, the network has confirmed.


"Kelly Osbourne is departing E!'s Fashion Police to pursue other opportunities, and we would like to thank her for her many contributions to the series over the past five years, during which time the show became a hit with viewers," E! said in a statement. "Fashion Police will return, as scheduled, on Friday, March 30th at 9:00 p.m. and no decisions have been made on her replacement."


According to TMZ , who first reported the story, the co-host left the series on Friday.


Osbourne had been threatening to leave the series publicly since her co-host Giuliana Rancic received backlash earlier this week after commenting that young actor Zendaya's dreadlocks at the Oscars made it look like she smelled like "patchouli oil." Off-camera, a fellow co-host replied, "Or weed?" and many believed it to be Osbourne, who then spoke out online.




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Behind That Shocking "How To Get Away With Murder" Season Finale Cliffhanger



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“I said, ‘If I’m going to go out, I better go out like f***ing Mufasa,” the latest casualty exclusively told BuzzFeed News. WARNING: MASSIVE SPOILERS!



Craig Sjodin / ABC


The first season of How to Get Away With Murder revolved around Annalise Keating (Viola Davis) and her team of associates and law students attempting to find out who murdered sorority girl Lila Stangard (Megan West). And in the Feb. 26 season finale, they finally did. But it looks like Season 2, which has not yet been officially ordered by ABC, could also be driven by the hunt for a killer since Rebecca Sutter (Katie Findlay) was murdered in the finale's closing moments.


Though it likely came as a shock to fans, 24-year-old Findlay has known the character's time on the show could end in death since the day she signed on. "I always sort of believed it could be a possibility because [creator] Pete [Nowalk], when I first came on the show, was really up-front with me about how he saw this girl and what her purpose would be," Findlay exclusively told BuzzFeed News in a recent phone interview. "I tried to keep it in the back of my head and remember that it could happen."


Despite the early warning, Findlay — and Nowalk — struggled with the harsh reality of actually axing Rebecca. "Pete called me a couple of days before the table read. He's the sweetest man in the world, and he was really sad," Findlay recalled. "He said, 'This is a really hard phone call for anybody to have to make, but we've turned it every which way and this is what needs to happen. I wanted to let you know before the table read. I wanted to give you some private time to process it because that would be awful to find out about a change this big in front of all your peers.' I really appreciated that because it was time I did need. So I had about a week to process and understand and figure it out and talk it out, and then we all started in on the episode."


No actor wants to be killed off a show they love, and Findlay was no exception. But after learning that Rebecca did not kill Lila, a crime she had been wrongly accused of all season long, the actor had one wish for how her character's death would be handled. "I said, 'If I'm going to go out, I better go out like fucking Mufasa because I was an angel," Findlay said of Rebecca. "It's a nice feeling knowing people were wrong," she added.



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That HIV Storyline Was A Step Back For The Progressive "How To Get Away With Murder"



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In the Season 1 finale, How to Get Away With Murder couldn’t resist including an after-school-special moment. But the characters and the audience deserved better. WARNING: Spoilers ahead!



Connor (Jack Falahee) discusses his sexual history with a nurse (Danielle Kennedy) in the How to Get Away With Murder Season 1 finale.


Mitchell Haaseth / ABC


Somehow, while solving the murder of Lila Stangard (Megan West), establishing multiple mysteries for an inevitable second season, and shoehorning in a case-of-the-week, the two-hour season finale of How to Get Away With Murder incorporated an HIV storyline.


The episode saw Oliver (Conrad Ricamora) urge his on-again, off-again boyfriend Connor (Jack Falahee) to get tested for STDs. The plot was not without the requisite AIDS scare (on the part of the sexually uninhibited Connor) and it also included an added twist ending (Oliver was the one who tested positive).


On the one hand, it's refreshing to see a television series once again tackling the subject of HIV, which has all but disappeared from the TV landscape. (Until Thursday night's HTGAWM finale, Eddie, played by Daniel Franzese, on HBO's Looking was the only HIV-positive character on a current series.) But on the other, the show's approach to HIV was an embarrassing representation of HTGAWM's muddled queer politics: Connor continues to alternate between a progressive representation of a sexually liberated gay man and a caricature who's defined solely by his bedroom activities and slut-shamed for his promiscuity.


Network television has given us numerous gay male characters over the past decade, but they've been men who remind the audience to be tolerant of their queer brothers and sisters but hold off on shocking them with an actual display of affection. So there's never been a character like Connor on network television before. His sexual escapades rival those of Brian (Gale Harold) on Showtime's Queer as Folk, and he's wholly unapologetic about his random hookups. Which is a beautiful thing. The ABC series deserves plenty of credit for taking things as far as it has, with more implied analingus than we ever could have hoped for in primetime. After all, mere man-on-man kissing is still controversial in 2015, as evidenced by the backlash over the recent same-sex kiss on The Walking Dead.


But Connor has also been one of the most frustratingly underdeveloped characters on HTGAWM. For much of the season, his primary characteristic has been that he's slutty — and his recklessness in the wake of Sam's (Tom Verica) murder has been directly tied to that. Almost all of the characters have engaged in casual sex, most of it ill-conceived, but none of them are as rigidly defined by what they do in the bedroom as Connor is. To be fair, it is tough to create a sexually liberated character who is more than his or her sexual liberations — and were it not for the HIV storyline in the finale, HTGAWM could probably have gotten a pass for Connor.



Connor leaves for class while Oliver (Conrad Ricamora) waits for the results of his HIV test.


Mitchell Haaseth / ABC


And while that HIV storyline might have been an attempt to add depth to the character of Connor, and to further the arc of his relationship with Oliver, the way it played out was too pedantic and condescending to be mistaken for actual character development. When Connor went in for his HIV test, he was lectured on his safe sex practices. It was disappointing to see that a character presented as sexually uninhibited had no idea he could contract HIV from topping, and that he seemed unclear as to why he and Oliver both had to get tested before they could resume sexual contact.


The story had an off-putting teaching moment vibe: After a season of sexual freedom, Connor had to face the consequences of his actions in the form of an HIV scare. Because naturally, as soon as his results were delayed, he immediately assumed the worst. It's not as though this never happens in real life, or that sexually active gay men couldn't use the reminder on the importance of condoms; it's more that it felt like the peak of HTGAWM's season-long confusion over how to handle Connor. None of the other characters who engaged in steamy sexual encounters got tested or had any concerns about what they could have contracted, but the finale managed to devote a sizable chunk of time to the possibility that Connor might "pay the price" for his rampant fucking.


On top of that, the twist at the end — Connor ends up testing negative, while clean-cut, sexually responsible Oliver finds out he's HIV positive — felt like another lesson to be learned: Anyone can contract HIV! It's territory that was covered by any number of TV series throughout the '80s and '90s. It's quite the paradox that How to Get Away With Murder, which has been painted as a forward-thinking series for its inclusion of Connor as well as its diverse cast, is presenting the same ideas that were on television three decades earlier.


Though HIV is not off-limits —and we could do with more representations of HIV-positive characters on television — the way HTGAWM's storyline played out was neither authentic nor earned. It wasn't fair to the characters, whose biggest moment up to this point revolved around Connor lying about being a drug addict. Contrast the treatment of HIV on HTGAWM with what Looking has done this season. The HBO series has managed to introduce discussions about safe sex and pre-exposure prophylaxis Truvada without ever falling into after-school-special territory by filtering the information through the lived experience of a well-rounded HIV-positive character. While not every series can be as steeped in queer politics as the LGBT-centric Looking, a show as progressive as HTGAWM at least owes Connor and Oliver a less old-fashioned storyline.




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Leonard Nimoy Was The Greatest "Simpsons" Guest Star Of All Time



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Wherever there is mystery and the unexplained, cosmic forces shall draw him near.


Leonard Nimoy played himself in only two episodes of The Simpsons, but both were packed with some of the best moments in the entire series.


Leonard Nimoy played himself in only two episodes of The Simpsons, but both were packed with some of the best moments in the entire series.


FOX / Via gosimpsonic.tumblr.com


Like when he had us question the nature of truth.



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When he put Mayor Quimby in his place.



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Here's The First Picture Of Eddie Redmayne As Transgender Painter Lili Elbe



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The Oscar winner is playing the first person to successfully undergo sex reassignment surgery in his next movie, The Danish Girl.


Here is the first picture that's been released of Eddie Redmayne in character as transgender pioneer Lili Elbe in his next movie, The Danish Girl.


Here is the first picture that's been released of Eddie Redmayne in character as transgender pioneer Lili Elbe in his next movie, The Danish Girl.


Universal Pictures


It will mark the actor's first role since his stellar performance as Stephen Hawking in The Theory of Everything, for which he won the Best Actor Oscar last week.


It will mark the actor's first role since his stellar performance as Stephen Hawking in The Theory of Everything, for which he won the Best Actor Oscar last week.


Materialscientist / en.wikipedia.org / Creative Commons


Elbe was born in Denmark in 1882 as Einar Wegener, and married fellow artist Gerta Gottlieb.


According to The Telegraph , Wegener first dressed in women's clothing, as seen above, when her wife needed a model.


Eight years later, after happily living as a woman for several years, Elbe underwent one of the first sex reassignment surgery operations.


The Independent said Nicole Kidman had previously signed up to take on the role, before dropping out and leaving the way for Redmayne.



There's extraordinary bravery and brilliant people that I've met, so I'm hoping it will be an interesting experience. ...


There is an incredibly valid discussion for why a trans actress isn't playing the part, because there are so many brilliant trans actresses, and I'm sure there are many who could play this part sensationally.


But one of the complications is that nowadays you have hormones, and many trans women have taken hormones. But to start this part playing male you'd have to come off the hormones, so that has been a discussion as well. Because back in that period there weren't hormones.





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"Empire" Is A Monster That Is Eating Network Television



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Fancy.



Taraji P. Henson and Terrence Howard.


Chuck Hodes/Fox


When it comes to ratings, Fox's Empire is on a trajectory that's unprecedented in broadcast television's recent history, which has mostly been marked by — to appropriate a phrase from Hakeem Lyon (Bryshere Y. Gray) — drip drops, if not just plain old slaughter. As of last week, it is the No. 1 show on network television in the 18 to 49 demographic advertisers seek. And once again, the show built on its ratings this week.


The Feb. 25 episode expanded the show's viewership for the seventh week in a row. In preliminary Nielsen numbers, it drew 13.9 million viewers and a 5.4 rating in the key 18 to 49 demo. When you compare that to the Jan. 7 premiere's already impressive audience of 9.9 million and 3.8 among those 18 to 49, it's clear the Fox drama has exploded. Since Nielsen began measuring total viewers as a data point in the early '90s, no new show has risen weekly like Empire has.


And the drama, led by Taraji P. Henson and Terrence Howard, is among very few shows in the past few years that begs to be watched live: In Live + Same Day 18 to 49 ratings — meaning, people who watch the show live or almost live — Wednesday's Empire was the most watched network drama since the September 2010 season premiere of Grey's Anatomy. Its live-tweeting statistics, naturally, have also skyrocketed. According to Fox, Wednesday's episode generated 714,742 "social comments" during the episode itself. Empire is now the most tweeted broadcast drama of the season, with an average 381,770 (second-place Scandal is averaging 355,012).


Television is in such flux these days. The biggest show among 18- to 49-year-olds isn't even on a network: AMC's The Walking Dead sneezes out huge ratings weekly (even opposite the Oscars Sunday night, it drew 13.4 million viewers and a 6.9 in the 18 to 49 demo — which, as you can see, are bigger than Empire's numbers). On broadcast television, the show that Empire recently leapfrogged for the No. 1 spot is the CBS comedy The Big Bang Theory, now in its eighth season. As opposed to Empire, which is burning bright out of the gate, Big Bang didn't become the most watched network show until its seventh season. But beyond those hits — and others, such as CBS's still-huge-in-total-audience NCIS, and popular demographic hits such as ABC's Scandal and Modern Family and NBC's The Voice — the field becomes more complicated and wilted. On the networks, shows that draw a 1.5 18 to 49 rating or higher are considered renewable hits; only a few years ago, a 1.5 was a disaster that resulted in immediate cancellation.



Jussie Smollett and Henson.


Fox


There are three more episodes left of Empire — the March 18 finale will be two hours — and it's the show that has redeemed Fox's annus horribilis. As a soap opera — and one that isn't as WTF and OMG as Shonda Rhimes' Scandal and How to Get Away With Murder, two other recent dramas that have brought people to their televisions and second screens to watch live — Fox's hope, one imagines, is that Empire will be a step toward rebuilding in its post-American Idol years, and one that can last as long as Lucious Lyon (Howard) draws breath. (Or beyond that, of course. Lucious has ALS on the show, and Howard has an erratic, violent past.)


For television as a whole, Empire is another example of the Scandal effect. Going into this season, having finally learned that black viewers watch television in droves and live, the networks inched toward programming accordingly. And to the surprise of no one who can do math, the strategy has worked: With Viola Davis at its center, How to Get Away With Murder has been a hit for ABC, and so has the network's family comedy Black-ish. Casts of color have also succeeded more modestly, but still notably, for ABC's Fresh Off the Boat (about an Asian-American family) and The CW's Jane the Virgin (for which its star Gina Rodriguez won a Golden Globe). Both shows will be back for sure next season. (ABC's Cristela, starring Cristela Alonzo, who inspired the show, is not a safe bet for a second season, however.)


Empire, meanwhile, with its Academy Award-nominated lead actors, musical elements, provocatively fluid sexuality, and soapy turns, is cutting across all audiences, with black, Latino, and white viewers all tuning in — even men are watching it. It's a monster.




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21 Reasons We Are Forever Thankful For Leonard Nimoy



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You were our honorary grandfather and we will treasure you always.




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Jack O'Connell And Salma Hayek Aren't Your Typical Fearless Action Heroes



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The Unbroken star spends most of the thriller ‘71 terrified, while Hayek’s Everly works as a shut-in’s tribute to Tarantino.



Jack O'Connell in '71


Roadside Attractions



Salma Hayek in Everly


RADiUS-TWC


Jack O'Connell looks scared shitless throughout most of '71.


And that fear only ratchets up the tension in the film, which opens in limited release this weekend along with the Salma Hayek-fronted Everly, both of which try what you might call a narrow-focus approach to action, centering on a character who's isolated, desperate, and only able to react.


To be clear, scared shitless is an expression O'Connell wears well. A strapping twentysomething who resembles a seasoned bruiser from some angles and an unguarded kid from others, the British actor was shockingly good as a tough teenager thrown in with the hardened grown-ups in last year's bracing prison movie Starred Up . O'Connell's just as impressive as another out-of-his-depth newcomer in director Yann Demange's (Dead Set) feature film debut, in which he plays a soldier-in-training whose first appearance on screen comes with a face bloodied from a boxing match. (Ironically, the actor's most recent role, in Angelina Jolie's Unbroken, gave him a shot at mainstream stardom but offered him the least to work with, putting his character in the position of a martyr rather than a man.)


The film '71 tracks O'Connell's character, Gary Hook, through the streets of Belfast during one tumultuous night during the early days of the Troubles. Hook's squadron has been deployed to help with what's been described to them as the "deteriorating security situation" in the area. They're theoretically around to assist the police, but the reality they arrive in is an urban war zone, and their first day out goes sickeningly wrong. What was meant to be a search of houses for weapons escalates into a riot, and Hook and another soldier get left behind in the chaos. When his colleague is shot, right in the middle of street, by members of an IRA faction, Hook takes off running.




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The Biggest Shock Of "House Of Cards" Season 3 Might've Happened In The First Episode



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And you thought throwing Zoe (Kate Mara) in front of a train was a crazy twist. WARNING: SPOILERS FROM SEASON 3, EPISODE 1 AHEAD.



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"Star Trek" Star Leonard Nimoy Dies



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The actor best known as the Vulcan Mr. Spock was 83.



Leonard Nimoy as Spock on an episode of Star Trek


Paramount / Courtesy Everett Collection


Leonard Nimoy, famous for his role as Mr. Spock in Star Trek, died Friday in Los Angeles from end-stage chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, his wife told The New York Times. He was 83.


Born in Boston, Nimoy had been acting for his entire life, moving to Los Angeles when he was 18. He landed his first (tiny) film roles in 1951, and worked relatively steadily in film and television throughout the 1950s and '60s — save for an 18-month stint serving in the Army in Georgia.


And then he was cast as Spock in Gene Roddenberry's initial pilot for Star Trek. Titled "The Cage," the NBC network brass felt the show was far too cerebral, and Roddenberry was forced to re-vamp the show and shoot another, more action-oriented pilot. Only Spock remained from the original cast, and although the original Star Trek TV series lasted only three seasons, Nimoy's life was never the same.


Arguably more than any other actor involved with Star Trek, even his co-star William Shatner, Nimoy became the most deeply identified with the steadfast sci-fi franchise, thanks both to his indelible performance as the logic-driven, half-Vulcan, half-human science officer, and the many iconic tropes of the character, including his pointed ears, slanted eyebrows, and unique Vulcan salute.



Leonard Nimoy promoting the Star Trek 40th Anniversary on Aug. 9, 2006


Frazer Harrison / Getty Images


As Spock began to dominate Nimoy's career, his relationship with the character became a complicated one. In 1977, he wrote an autobiography bluntly titled I Am Not Spock. Eighteen years later — and after six Star Trek movies and a memorable guest star appearance on a two-part episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation — Nimoy published a second autobiography, titled I Am Spock.


Nimoy also stepped behind the camera, directing the third and fourth Star Trek films, The Search for Spock and The Voyage Home, as well as the 1987 comedy 3 Men and a Baby. He often did voice-over work, both as a narrator (for the History channel's Ancient Mysteries) and as an actor (including the 1986 animated film Transformers: The Movie, the 2001 Disney animated film Atlantis: The Lost Empire, and the 2011 live-action film Transformers: Dark of the Moon).


But Spock remained an constant presence in Nimoy's life. When J.J. Abrams re-booted the Star Trek film series in 2009 with a new cast — and new timeline — the filmmaker convinced Nimoy to step back into the enduring role as the long-lived half-Vulcan, opposite Zachary Quinto as the character's younger counterpart. It is fitting that Nimoy's final on screen role was as Spock, in 2013's Star Trek Into Darkness. At the film's premiere in Los Angeles, Nimoy's brief cameo was greeted with a thunderous ovation.


He is survived by his wife, Susan Bay Nimoy, brother Melvin, children Adam and Julie, stepson Aaron Bay Schuck, six grandchildren, and one great-grandchild.




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"Star Trek" Star Leonard Nimoy Dies



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The actor best known as the Vulcan Mr. Spock was 83.



Leonard Nimoy, right, on the set of Star Trek


Anonymous / ASSOCIATED PRESS


Leonard Nimoy, famous for his role as Mr. Spock in Star Trek, died Friday in Los Angeles, his wife told the New York Times. He was 83.


Please check back for updates.




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Will Smith's New Movie "Focus" Makes Con Artistry Look So Good



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It’s no Ocean’s Eleven or Duplicity, but Focus is the kind of escapist grifter movie that goes down easy.



Margot Robbie and Will Smith in Focus


Warner Bros.


No profession gets more flatteringly upsold on screen than that of the con artist. There's every possibility that the life of an actual career grifter is one of clammy desperation and sociopathic predation, built on bilking money out of the most vulnerable. But in the movies (and on shows like White Collar), scammers frequently look glorious, swanning through the lobbies of high-end hotels and swank casinos in sleek designer wear, wheeling and dealing to rob only the deserving — the cruel, the greedy, the arrogant, the criminal, and the corporations covered by insurance. There's honor among thieves, a community, a shared lingo. On screen, conning gets to be a craft, or more accurately, a magic trick in which the audience gets to witness the setup but still be surprised by the payoff when it turns out there's another layer to the con we never saw coming.


Focus, the new film starring Will Smith and Margot Robbie and written and directed by Glenn Ficarra and John Requa (Crazy, Stupid, Love.), takes place in that rarified realm of high-thread-count sheets and last-minute twists. It tips its hat to Out of Sight, the lighter-than-air likes of Ocean's Eleven, The Sting, and Trouble in Paradise, and the spies-turned-corporate-moles in Duplicity. Focus, which hits theaters on Feb. 27, doesn't work as well as any of them, but it's still a perfectly pretty meringue of a movie that offers a nice showcase for Smith's movie star allure and a better one of Robbie, who more than keeps up with her more famous romantic lead, even when her character doesn't.


The action starts in New York, where the experienced Nicky (Will Smith) takes newbie Jess (Margot Robbie) under his wing, then heads to New Orleans for some Super Bowl-adjacent scams, at which point Nicky dumps his protégé after they become involved. Three years later, we pick up in a plush slice of Buenos Aires, where there's a race car team owner named Garriga (Rodrigo Santoro), a proprietary fuel burn algorithm, and the reuniting of the former lovers and colleagues, who aren't sure if they trust each other anymore.



Warner Bros.




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The New Season Of "American Horror Story" Is Called "Hotel" And Features Lady Gaga



via BuzzFeed

Little Monsters rejoice!


FX has confirmed to BuzzFeed News that Season 5 of American Horror Story will feature Lady Gaga.


FX has confirmed to BuzzFeed News that Season 5 of American Horror Story will feature Lady Gaga.


ladygaga.wikia.com


...Along with a short teaser.



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